The Chicago Reporter

The Chicago Reporter
Frequency Monthly
Year founded 1972
Company Community Renewal Society
Country United States
Based in Chicago, Illinois
Language English
Website www.chicagoreporter.com
ISSN 0300-6921

The Chicago Reporter is a monthly periodical based in Chicago, Illinois, USA. Founded in 1972, it covers poverty and race issues.[1]It was founded by John A. McDermott, who sought to create "the nation's first publication devoted to analyzing and investigating local racial issues."[2] In 1974, its yearly budget was $120,000, most of which was paid by the Ford Foundation.[1]

Impact

The Chicago Reporter’s Investigative reporting has had impact in several areas of Chicago and Illinois infrastructure. The reporter’s earliest influence is its expose of the Chicago Police Department’s discriminatory disorderly conduct arrests in 1982[3], prompting the American Civil liberties Union (ACLU) to file suit against them, leading to a U.S District Court Judge to rule their arrests unconstitutional. By 1983, the Chicago Police Departments’ disorderly arrest policy had to be changed to meet federal law.[4] In 2007, The Chicago Reporter also released a study detailing how the largest mortgage lender in the country, Countrywide, were lending high interest loans in majority to minority lenders leading then attorney general of Illinois Lisa Madigan to Subpoena Countrywide, ultimately resulting in an 8.7 billion dollar settlement in 2008.[5] The Chicago Reporter also won recognition for reporting on the Chicago Fire Department's under-reporting fire deaths in poor and minority neighborhoods.[2]

Reputation

The Chicago Reporter 's style is regarded as "dispassionate investigative journalism" that has garnered it critical acclaim by several other news publications as well as politicians.[6] U.S Senator for Illinois, Dick Durbin, has reported saying "The Chicago Reporter gives us reflection, not reflex. In a digital world of speed and brevity, their coverage takes the time and invests the analysis in issues ranging from gun control to deficits to immigration. The Chicago Reporter earns its stripes with credibility and relevance". Clarence Page of the Chicago Tribune stated "The Chicago Reporter is “consistently focused on covering what continues to be Chicago’s toughest, yet most important story: race relations”.[6]

Awards

The Chicago Reporter and it's staff have won several awards beginning in 1974, including the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Public Service from the Society of Professional Journalists, dozens of Peter Lisagor Awards and the Salute to Excellence Award from the National Association of Black Journalists.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 "Chicago Reporter: Small Journal With Great Ways", Jet, December 26, 1974, retrieved February 9, 2010
  2. 1 2 ROSSI, ROSALIND. "Chicago Reporter founder John McDermott dies at 70," Chicago Sun-Times, August 19, 1996: 16, accessed July 05, 2017, via Newsbank.
  3. "Minority Leaders Charge Police with 'Disorderly Conduct'". Chicago Reporter. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  4. "Reporter Probe Spurs U.S. Action". Chicago Reporter. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  5. Hearing on “The Causes and Current State of the Financial Crisis”, Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. 6 (2010) (Testimony of Lisa Madigan). Retrieved 2018-08-23
  6. 1 2 "The Chicago Reporter – City's Foremost, Most Trusted Publication on Race and Poverty Issues – Commemorates 40th Anniversary | Community Renewal Society". www.communityrenewalsociety.org. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  7. "Chicago Reporter » Awards". Chicago Reporter. Retrieved 2018-08-23.


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